| Did you grow up before or after the VCR? With or without
computers? Pre or post the World Wide Web? Even Luddites have to admit
it makes things more interesting, not knowing where well be next
but knowing well be there soon. Where does painting fit
in? we wonder. Theres been a lot of speculation lately about who
the next generation of painters will be, what attitudes might motivate
painting in the future, and, perhaps most important, what it will look
like. Keep an eye on Munro Galloway. In his first solo exhibition of
impressively stylish and savvy paintings, he uses visual allure as a
springboard to grapple with the way paintingt constructs its relation
to history, to mass culture, and to something we might describe as the
place where "the avant-garde meets the good life". In contrast to the quirky realism of recent figurative painting (e.g., of Karen Kilimnik, John Currin, and Elizabeth Peyton), Galloways paintings of young, beautiful Asians (mostly men, at least in this show) posed in elegantly empty interiors look all "grown up". This is due, in part, to Galloways many references to Manet. Its not just the languorous handling of paint, or the refined aesthetics of a palette restrained to muted tonalities, but also to a certain attitude that Galloway seems to borrow from Manet. That attitude is manifest in the isolation of ultrafashionable figures who appear to be stayed, both in their own self-consciousness at being looked at and by their desire to edify the one whose gaze pins them in place. Factored in as another field of influence, many of the sultry moments Galloway renders are taken from a recent Prada ad campaign featuring Takeshi Kaneshiro, a superstar of Hong Kong action cinema, who is as accomplished in the martial arts and acting as he is in projecting "the look". Reverberating in the paintings, broadcasting uniqueness yet manufactured for mass consumption, this "look" connotes a lifestyle of high taste with a minimalist polish. Its also the visual expression of new globalism: Prada folds into Kaneshiro into Hong Kong action cinema into Chelsea chic into an art that brings it all to the brink of being pure paint.. In the ephemeral and fluid relations between music, art, fashion, design, décor, and film, a turn-of-the-century commercial avant-garde has begun to flourish. It is significant that Galloways paintings dont stand at a distance from the ambient cultural zone they describe. They are fluent in the visual language of mass culture anyone who can "read" a Prada ad, for example, has instant access. Galloway moves between local and global, past and present, East and West, telescoping through layers of representation. Despite this busyness, the place in which we encounter his graceful, gender-lite figures is, prototypically, a world of digital perfection, a fashionable, fictional Orient. But Galloway also intimates life behind the façade: a pulse, a groove, something vaguely personal. A sense of displacement finds its way into the quasi-narrative framework, amplified by a vagrant subject whose voice seems to be "channeled" in the title of the exhibition, "I could take you far away from here." In I could live in hope, 1999, a three-panel, panoramic painting of a fallen figure who stretches over thirteen feet long, ambiguity takes on a fashionable life of its own. Is the figure male or female? Dead or alive? Is it all for the camera, this coital edge of cool? Galloway muscles painting right past the myth of its irrelevance and into a familiar, consumer-based sublime that plays on every screen in America. - Jan Avgikos |
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| Dreams never
end, 1999 oil on canvas, 54x 66" |